Babies Named After A Brand
from the not-a-good-idea dept
You may remember during the dot com boom, the Internet Underground Music Archive (IUMA) offered parents money
to name their babies IUMA, and some actually took them up on the offer. A year later, a married couple tried to
auction their baby's name off to major corporations on eBay. Last year, Acclaim entertainment offered
$10,000 to anyone willing to legally change their name to that of a video game character. It seems these companies are going the wrong route by paying parents to name their kids after certain brands. Many parents
are naming their kids after brands for free - sometimes causing distress in the family. The mother of one of six American boys named Timberland, claims she wanted to call the boy Kevin, but her (since divorced) husband insisted the boy be called Timberland or Reebok. The article names plenty of other unfortunately named children, who are going to have hell to pay in school. There's a Gouda, a Bologna, a Xerox and apparently Camry is an increasingly popular boys name. Please, please, please do
not name your child Techdirt.
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No Subject Given
Oh yeah. Imaginery works great.
Not dissing you Mike, for whatever reason, the name really works for many of my southern relatives. :-)
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Outrage
Jokes aside, can the parents be sued for naming their kid "Nike", if Nike did not
want their trademark to be used as a baby-name ?
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Re: Outrage
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Nike Royalties
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Re: Nike Royalties
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No Subject Given
How about treating the "i" as a variable and using Techd1rt for the first-born, Techd2rt for the next, and so on.
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No Subject Given
popular names here include kleenex, durex, denon, and gucci
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Raw Data
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